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17 - Development of buttresses in rainforest trees: the influence of mechanical stress

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 October 2009

J. Grace
Affiliation:
University of Edinburgh
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Summary

Abstract

An experimental study was performed to test the model of buttress development proposed by Claus Mattheck: that the high rates of growth occurring along the top of the junction between the trunk and the lateral roots are stimulated by the mechanical strains set up by wind forces which are concentrated in these regions. Strain gauges were attached around the base of the trunk and the lateral roots of young rainforest trees which were developing buttresses; strains were measured during simulated wind events when the trunk was bent over using a winch. Results supported Mattheck's theory: strains were concentrated along the top of developing buttresses and on the trunk above them – the places of maximum growth – and were negligible on the sides of the buttresses and at the base of the trunk where no growth was occurring. Buttress development seems to be controlled by the mechanical environment of the tree. Once the root system, in which lateral roots are attached to the subsoil well away from the trunk by sinker roots, has formed the growth of buttresses occurs automatically. This produces a mechanically efficient anchorage system in terms of the carbon investment. Trees which do not form buttresses instead transfer forces into the ground using a tap root or sinkers positioned close to the trunk.

Introduction

Root buttresses are a characteristic feature of the trees of lowland tropical rainforest. These huge plate-like structures which are formed around the base of the trunk have been the subject of speculation by generations of biologists who have attempted to discover what function they serve and what influences their development.

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Wind and Trees , pp. 293 - 302
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1995

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